Moderna’s chief executive officer doesn’t expect any problems with the development of a booster shot against the latest strain of the CCP virus and hopes clinical trials can begin early next year.
“It only needs minor adjustments for Omicron. I don’t expect any problems,” Stéphane Bancel told Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger, likely referring to the company’s currently authorized 50 microgram dose booster of its mRNA-1273 vaccine.
Bancel noted that the biotechnology company is currently only awaiting important information on Omicron to begin development.
“That will take another week or two,” Bancel said, adding that “it will take a few months before we can produce 500 million doses after approval.”
If the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Switzerland’s Swissmedic, and other regulatory agencies require further studies, then that would add at least three months, he said.
“Some authorities want a study, others are still undecided,” Bancel told the paper. “In my opinion, it depends very much on how severely the disease progresses.”
The company said in a statement that its currently authorized booster shot increased Omicron neutralizing antibody levels 37-fold, while a not-yet-approved 100 microgram dose booster raised them 83-fold.
Bancel called the findings of the lab study a “reassuring” development, noting that the company “will continue to rapidly advance an Omicron-specific booster candidate into clinical testing.”
The company produced between 700 million and 800 million COVID-19 vaccine doses this year, and expects to produce a higher number in 2022, boosting production from 100 million doses a month to 150 million.
“Vaccination with [Moderna’s vaccine] was associated with a significantly increased risk of myocarditis or myopericarditis in the Danish population,” and the rate was “threefold to fourfold higher” with the Moderna vaccine compared to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, authors said in the study, which spanned almost 85 percent of Danes, or 4.9 million people aged 12 and older.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported on Dec. 18 that Omicron cases have now been reported in 89 countries, and that the number of infections was doubling every 1.5 to 3 days in areas with community transmission.